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Polymer identification analysis: resolving a material defect in the laboratory

Resolving a Material Defect Through Polymer Identification

A change in mechanical behavior, yellowing, a loss of thermal resistance, a process variation, or a difference between two batches can reveal a formulation issue or a raw material problem. In this context, polymer identification makes it possible to determine the nature of the matrix, verify the presence of a copolymer, detect light organic additives, and estimate the proportion of mineral fillers. This approach helps manufacturers compare two references, secure dual sourcing, qualify an incoming material, or investigate a nonconformity in production. For related needs, it is also possible to take a deeper look at Material Analysis or complement the study with a Laboratory Material Assessment.

Identify the polymer matrix and its structure

The analysis makes it possible to determine the polymer family, for example PE, PP, PVC, or PU, and to confirm whether the sample is copolymeric or not. Pyrolysis coupled with chromatography and mass spectrometry provides useful structural information on the fragments generated, monomers, oligomers, and certain residual solvents. Comparing profiles can also highlight differences in chain lengths between two materials assumed to be equivalent.

Characterization techniques used

FTIR is used to obtain a spectral signature and guide the identification of the polymer family. TGA characterizes the decomposition profile up to high temperature, the degradation temperature, and the residual mass associated with mineral fillers. Pyrolysis-GC/MS provides a more detailed view of the chemical structure, with qualitative searching for monomers, oligomers, residual solvents, and other semi-volatile organic compounds. SEM-EDX completes the analysis for the elemental nature and morphology of the fillers.

Expertise focused on industrial decision-making

The value of a specialized laboratory lies not only in measurement, but in the cross-analysis of results. The analysis aims to answer a specific industrial question: material mix-up, supplier drift, formulation variation, thermal degradation, batch-to-batch differences, or performance deviation. This expert interpretation makes it possible to prioritize the likely causes and guide corrective actions or additional tests, for example in the event of particles or heterogeneities with an Inclusion Analysis Laboratory.

Analytical methods and laboratory support

The laboratory uses a step-by-step approach, from simple identification to more advanced structural analysis. The tests may combine FTIR, TGA, pyrolysis-GC/MS, and SEM-EDX depending on the question asked and the complexity of the material. This combination makes it possible to identify the polymer family, observe its thermal decomposition profile, qualitatively search for monomers, oligomers, residual solvents, and semi-volatile compounds, and then characterize the mineral fillers present. The goal is to provide an interpretation that can be used for quality, R&D, sourcing, or failure analysis.

Detect light additives and mineral fillers

In addition to the organic matrix, the study can qualitatively search for certain semi-volatile additives such as plasticizers, flame retardants, release agents, or antioxidants. TGA makes it possible to estimate the mass fraction of mineral fillers, while SEM-EDX contributes to the elemental identification of fillers containing, for example, Ti, Al, Ca, or Si, as well as to their morphological observation. To explore this aspect further, the laboratory also offers expertise in Laboratory SEM Analysis.

An approach tailored to the level of investigation

Depending on the objective, the investigation can range from a quick exploratory check to a more complete formulation study. A first step may simply consist of confirming the main polymer and the filler content. A second step may aim to understand the structure, light additives, and differences between two references. For needs focused on thermal behavior, also see Polymer Analysis By TGA In The Laboratory.

Results useful for quality, R&D, and sourcing

The results can be used to secure dual sourcing for elastomers or thermoplastics, compare a competing material in a benchmarking approach, investigate yellowing, or verify consistency between the specifications and the material received. The laboratory also supports teams in defining the right level of analysis in order to obtain a response that is proportionate to the technical and economic need.

Use cases and taking action

Launch an analysis as soon as there is any doubt about the nature of a material, a performance gap, a process drift, a visual difference, or a batch-to-batch non-conformity. This service is particularly relevant for comparing two materials, verifying a supplier substitution, understanding degradation, or documenting a base formulation before development. To get started: identify the need, send the samples and the usage context, compare the references if necessary, interpret the results with the laboratory, secure quality, R&D, or purchasing decisions.

Frequently asked questions

How can you quickly identify a polymer to understand the origin of a material defect?

To understand the origin of a material defect, you must first confirm the nature of the polymer and check whether the actual formulation matches expectations. A polymer analysis strategy can reveal a material mix-up, a difference in copolymerization, a variation in chain length, the presence of semi-volatile additives, or a difference in mineral filler content. This information quickly guides sorting decisions, supplier comparisons, or technical investigations.

What information can a polymer identification analysis in the laboratory provide?

A polymer identification analysis can confirm the nature of the main polymer, specify whether it is a copolymer, search for semi-volatile organic compounds, compare thermal degradation signatures, and assess the presence of mineral fillers. It therefore provides a concrete reading of the material’s base formulation and its potential deviations.

What techniques are used to analyze a polymer in the event of nonconformity or material comparison?

The most relevant techniques are FTIR for rapid identification, TGA for thermal behavior and the mineral fraction, pyrolysis-GC/MS for structure and associated organic compounds, and SEM-EDX for mineral fillers. Their combination is chosen according to the level of precision expected and the nature of the material defect.

Why call on the FILAB laboratory for a polymer analysis focused on problem solving?

Working with the FILAB laboratory provides a targeted analytical answer, followed by an interpretation focused on industrial use. This approach reduces uncertainty in the event of non-compliance, benchmarking, a supplier change, or a performance investigation on a polymer material.

When should a polymer identification analysis be launched?

It is relevant to launch the analysis when a material no longer behaves as expected, when a supplier change is being considered, or when a formulation comparison becomes necessary. The goal is to identify, understand, compare, and validate the material before making an industrial decision.
The filab advantages
A highly qualified team
A highly qualified team
Responsiveness in responding to and processing requests
Responsiveness in responding to and processing requests
A COFRAC ISO 17025 accredited laboratory
A COFRAC ISO 17025 accredited laboratory
(Staves available on www.cofrac.com - Accreditation number: 1-1793)
A complete analytical facility of 5,200m²
A complete analytical facility of 5,200m²
Tailor-made support
Tailor-made support
Video debriefing available with the expert
Video debriefing available with the expert
Thomas GAUTIER Head of Materials Department
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